Choosing the article name

[edit]

Cantonese, Wade-Giles, Pinyin... Some even have English names! How do we choose?

  1. The name that the artist uses to release his/her/their albums.
  2. The Google rule: Do a search for each possible name next to the keyword -wikipedia. This eliminates all Wikipedia entries, as well as equivalent forks. Whichever name appears most commonly will be the one used as the article's title.
  3. In the case where an artist has produced his or her works and is known by two different names, choose the current official name of the artist. For example, although Jasmine Leong first released her albums without a stage name, her current official English stage name is Fish Leong.

Within the article itself

[edit]

In the first mention of the artist in the article's text, priority shall be as follows:

  1. English name. If the name hasn't been used since the artist's debut (e.g. Alexander Lee-Hom Wang and Wayne "J.J." Lin), then do not use it.
  2. Romanizations used in the industry in question. Faye Wong is from Beijing, but she sings in Hong Kong. Her birth name is thus spelt in Pinyin, but she will be introduced in the first line of the article as Faye Wong, not Faye Wang. Same goes for Yumiko Cheng (not Yumiko Zheng). For Mandopop artists, Taiwanese artists will have their birth names spelt in Wade-Giles, while Mainland artists will have birth names spelt in Pinyin.
  3. Do not use nicknames (e.g. HOCC). Those are reserved for the infoboxes.

If an artist is credited only with an English name and no last name (e.g. Selina), then a Pinyin or Wade-Giles last name may be used to disambiguate. Similarly, you can attach the words (Taiwanese/Chinese/Hong Kong singer).

Locale conventions

[edit]

As a workgroup in WikiProject China, we will abide by the naming conventions posted there. However, within the text of the article (i.e. excluding templates and infoboxes), the terms China/Taiwan/Hong Kong shall refer to the industries that are dominant in those regions. The reason for this is because most Taiwanese awards are given to Taiwanese artists. Likewise, Hong Kong awards mostly go to Hong Kong artists. The word "Taiwanese" can be used interchangeably to describe:

  1. the Taiwanese music industry.
  2. someone from the Republic of China (Taiwan)


For those editors who are changing  Republic of China (Taiwan) to  Taiwan: the Republic of China encompasses Taiwan, and is the current official name of the political entity governing that region. Yes, the common name for the area is "Taiwan" -- that's why the common name is in parentheses. That way, we recognize the common name and the official name.

What to put in an infobox's Origin field

[edit]

The term "Greater China"

[edit]

Usually, this term is used to encompass all three regions, and is used primarily for award shows. Greater China is usually described as either "the entire nation" (simplified Chinese: 全国; traditional Chinese: 全國; pinyin: quán guó) or "the entire world/planet" (Chinese: 全球; pinyin: quán qiú). The term may seem politically charged, especially for supporters of Taiwan independence, but it's really just a collective term for all three Chinese pop regions.

When geographical information is missing

[edit]
In Hong Kong's case, you may use region names to disambiguate the part of Hong Kong that is being referred to e.g. Kowloon.

Traditional vs. Simplified, Pinyin vs. Cantonese

[edit]

For artists working in Hong Kong or Taiwan:

For artists working in Mainland China, Singapore or Malaysia:

For crossover artists coming from South Korea (or elsewhere):

Group vs. Band

[edit]

For the purposes of this project:

From this definition, Mayday is a band. Fahrenheit is a group.

Label conventions

[edit]

Album conventions

[edit]

Please attach (<artist name> album) when creating album pages. This makes the page specific from the get-go.

Genres

[edit]

TBD